,
Puck 1901. A popular daily newspaper serving Albany, NY was named the
Knickerbocker News for the region's Dutch heritage and Irving's character. It ran from 1843 to 1988, when it was merged with the
Times Union. In the 19th century a literary group was named after the character:
Knickerbocker Group, who also had their own magazine,
The Knickerbocker (1833–1865). In the first and second issue Knickerbocker gave a supposed interview. The name "knickerbocker" has become a popular nickname for people who reside in
Manhattan. It also inspired the name of a type of baggy-kneed trousers for boys:
knickerbockers. The New York basketball team
New York Knickerbockers (more commonly known as the
Knicks) also derived their name from this character. It also inspired a beer brand by
Jacob Ruppert, the first sponsors of the TV show
Tonight!, as well as sponsors of New York Giants baseball, with prominent "Have a Knick" signs at the
Polo Grounds.
Igor Cassini, a gossip columnist, used the name "
Cholly Knickerbocker" as his
pseudonym. "Father Knickerbocker" served the role of
civic personification of New York City in the illustrated
Daily Graphic newspaper,
Puck magazine, and elsewhere. In May 1949, polyglot city official James J. O’Brien toured the globe dressed as Father Knickerbocker on behalf of the New York
World Trade Week Committee. The NBA's renowned
New York Knicks franchise is fully known as the "New York Knickerbockers". From their debut in 1946 through the 1963-64 season, the Knicks were represented by a logo that came to be known as "Father Knickerbocker". The logo was later used as an identity for the Knicks' developmental team in Westchester. Father Knickerbocker was also used on the Con Edison electric company's logo until 1968. ==Sources==